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CSTO Military Alliance 'Committed To Armenia's Defense'

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  • CSTO Military Alliance 'Committed To Armenia's Defense'

    CSTO MILITARY ALLIANCE 'COMMITTED TO ARMENIA'S DEFENSE'

    Asbarez
    http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/06/military-allian ce-%e2%80%98committed-to-armenia%e2%80%99s-defense %e2%80%99/
    Aug 6, 2009

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Armenia can count on military support from fellow
    members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) in case
    of a new war with Azerbaijan, the secretary general of the Russian-led
    defense alliance indicated on Thursday.

    "When it comes to war, one has to understand that the CSTO is
    based on the Collective Security Treaty, Article 4 of which says
    that an aggression against one of the organization's member states
    is an aggression against all member states," Nikolay Bordyuzha said
    during a video conference with Armenian journalists. "We will proceed
    from that."

    Bordyuzha was responding to a question about what the CSTO would do if
    Azerbaijan, which is not a member of the security pact, were to launch
    a military campaign against Armenia to win back Nagorno-Karabakh.

    The CSTO was set up in the wake of the Soviet collapse and currently
    comprises Russia and six other ex-Soviet republics: Armenia, Belarus,
    Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. Yerevan's membership
    in the alliance reflects its close military ties with Moscow.

    Analysts in Yerevan have long doubted that CSTO member states other
    than Russia would provide military assistance to Armenia in the event
    of renewed war in Karabakh. In fact, some of those states, notably
    Kazakhstan, have voted for Karabakh-related resolutions submitted by
    Azerbaijan to various international organizations.

    "Often times things that are written on paper are not put into
    practice," said Tevan Poghosian, chairman of the Armenian Atlantic
    Association, which promotes closer ties between Armenia and
    NATO. "Since that agreement [mentioned by Bordyuzha] has never been
    tested in practice, I wouldn't put much trust into it."

    Bordyuzha noted with satisfaction that international efforts to
    settle the Karabakh conflict have made significant progress of late
    and could soon yield a breakthrough. "I very much hope that the
    efforts of the Minsk Group, which is working very actively today,
    and the meetings of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan will
    lead to a peaceful resolution of the conflict," he said. "Everything
    testifies to that now."

    Bordyuzha would not be drawn on the CSTO's possible involvement in an
    international peacekeeping force that would be deployed in the conflict
    zone should the warring sides agree on a peace plan proposed by the
    French, Russian and U.S. mediators. "The issue of the participation
    of peacekeeping forces has never been discussed," he said. "Besides,
    I must say that CSTO's peacekeeping forces are still being formed
    and will be ready only by the end of this month."

    The Russian official appeared to refer to a NATO-style rapid reaction
    force which the CSTO members except Belarus and Uzbekistan agreed
    to form in June. The Armenian government has yet to clarify its
    contribution to the force officially called the Collective Operational
    Reaction Forces (CORF).
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